Abstract
The main argument of this paper is that changes in the formal and informal institutions that govern natural resources in mountain regions of northern Thailand have been critical for environmental changes, livelihoods and sustainability. Over the past decade, there have been new insights from interdisciplinary research on how societies interact with environmental changes in mountain regions. These have underlined the importance of institutions as both causes and responses to environmental change, and how institutions themselves arise from the way environmental and sustainability problems are constructed. In this chapter, these more general findings will be illustrated primarily through examples from recent and ongoing research in the mountain region of Northern Thailand. Taken together, these various studies challenge long-held beliefs about what constitutes problems in environmental change and sustainability, underline the need for a better understanding of cross-scale interactions, and point the way towards a more open and accountable science in support of sustainability.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
References
Batterbury, S., and Forsyth, T. (1999). Fighting back: Human adaptation in marginal environments. Environment 41, 6–11, 25–30.
Berkes, F. 2002. Cross-scale institutional linkages: Perspectives from the bottom up. In “The dilemma of the commons.” (E. Ostrom, N. Dorsak, P. C. Stern, S. Stonich, and E. U. Weber, Eds.), pp. 293–321. National Academy Press, Washington DC.
Contreras, A. P., Lebel, L., and Pasong, S. (2001). “The political economy of tropical and boreal forests.” IDGEC Scoping Report 3, Dartmouth, USA.
Contreras, A. P. (2003). “The Kingdom and the Republic: Forest governance and political transformation in Thailand and the Philippines.” Ateneo de Manila University Press, Manila.
Dauvergne, P. (2001). “Loggers and degradation in the Asia-Pacific: Corporations and environmental management.” Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
England, P. (1996). UNCED and the implementation of forest policy in Thailand. In “Seeing forests for trees: Environment and environmentalism in Thailand.” (P. Hirsch, Ed.), pp. 53–71. Silkworm Books, Chiang Mai.
Forsyth, T. (1996). Science, myth and knowledge: Testing Himalayan environmental degradation in Thailand. Geoforum 27, 375–292.
Forsyth, T. (1999). Questioning the impacts of shifting cultivation. Watershed 5, 23–29.
Ganjanapan, A. (2000). “Local control of land and forest: Cultural dimensions of resource management in Northern Thailand.” Regional Centre for Social Science and Sustainable Development, Chiang Mai, Thailand.
Laungaramsri, P. (2002). “Redefining nature: Karen ecological knowledge and the challenge to the modern conservation paradigm.” Earthworm Books, Chennai, India.
Lebel, L. (in preparation a). “Institutional dynamics and interplay and the governace of forests in Northern Thailand.” Unpublished USER Working Paper. Unit for Social and Environmental Research, Chiang Mai University.
Lebel L, Garden P, Myint C., Khrutmuang S. (in preparation b). Biodiversity and Sustainable Livelihoods in the Uplands ofNorthern Thailand. Unpublished USER Working Paper. Unit for Social and Environmental Research: Chiang Mai University.
Poulsen, E., Skov, F, Lakanvichian, S., Thanisawanyangkura, S., Borgtoft, H., and Hoiris, O. (2001). “Forest in culture — Culture in forest: Perspectives from Northern Thailand.” Research Centre on Forest and People in Thailand, Denmark.
Pragtong, K., and Thomas, D. E. (1990). Evolving management systems in Thailand. In “Keepers of the forest: Land management alternatives in Southeast Asia.” (M. Poffenberger, Ed.), pp. 167–186. Ateneo de Manila University Press, Manila.
Rerkasem, K., and Rerkasem, B. (1995). Montane mainland South-east Asia: Agroecosystems in transition. Global Environmental Change 5, 313–322.
Rerkasem, K., Yimyam, N., Korsamphan, C., Thong-Ngam, C., and Rerkasem, B. (2002). Agrodiversity lessons in mountain land management. Mountain Research and Development 22, 4–9.
Schmidt-Vogt, D. (1998). Defining degradation: The impacts of swidden on forests in northern Thailand. Mountain Research and Development 18, 135–149.
Santasombat, Y. (2003). “Biodiversity, local knowledge and sustainable development.” Regional Centre for Social Science and Sustainable Development, Chiang Mai University.
Scott, J. C. (1998). “Seeing like a state: How certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed.” Yale University Press, New Haven.
Tan-kim-yong, U. (1997). The Karen culture: A co-existence of two forest conservation systems. In “Development or domestication? Indigenous peoples of Southeast Asia.” (D. McCaskill, and K. Kampe, Eds.), pp. 219–236. Silkworm Books, Chiang Mai, Thailand.
Thomas, D. E., Preechapanya, P., and Saipothong, P. (2003). “Landscape agroforestry in upper tributary watersheds of Northern Thailand.” ICRAF, Chiang Mai University.
Thong-Ngam, C., Shinawatra, B., Healy, S., and Trebuil, G. (1995). Farmer’s resource management and decision-making in the context of changes in the Thai highlands. In “Proceedings of First Symposium on Montane Mainland Southeast Asia in Transition.” 12–16 November, 1995, Chiang Mai University, pp. 462–487.
Vandergeest, P. (1996). Mapping nature: Territorialization of forest rights in Thailand. Society and Natural Resources 9, 159–175.
Vandergeest, P. (2003). Racialization and citizenship in Thai forest politics. Society and Natural Resources 16, 19–37.
Young, O. R., Agrwal, A., King, L. A., Sand, P. H., Underdal, A., and Wasson, M. (1999). “Institutional dimensions of global environmental change. Science Plan.” IHDP Report 9, Bonn.
Young, O. R. (2002). Institutional interplay: The environmental consequences of cross-scale interactions. In “Drama of the commons.” (E. Ostrom, T. Dietz, N. Dolsak, P. C. Stern, S. Stonich, and E. U. Weber Eds.), pp. 263–291. National Academy Press, Washington DC.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 Springer
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Lebel, L. (2005). Institutional Dynamics and Interplay: Critical Processes for Forest Governance and Sustainability in the Mountain Regions of Northern Thailand. In: Huber, U.M., Bugmann, H.K.M., Reasoner, M.A. (eds) Global Change and Mountain Regions. Advances in Global Change Research, vol 23. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3508-X_53
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3508-X_53
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-3507-4
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-3508-1
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)